Pups
The Columbine shootings may give Pups a hint of importance, but really
this Dog Day Afternoon for the Clearasil set is silly, hollow, and
pretentious. When a director goes by one name only, you know it's time to
worry. And when smug MTV host Kurt Loder gives a film's best performance,
playing himself, you know you're in for serious trouble.
Bonnie and Clyde and Mickey and Mallory are ready for Social Security compared
with the outlaws conjured by writer/director Ash. These hostage-taking bank
robbers, the asthmatic Stevie and his loopy girlfriend Rocky, are only 13. They
can barely get their little hands around their big guns, but they're savvy to
the difference between a .44 and a .357 Magnum. All that violence, all that TV,
all that suburban meaninglessness! No wonder they storm a bank and then can't
take their eyes off the tube when local news and MTV begin live coverage of
their exploits.
With better actors -- maybe the eerie kid from The Sixth Sense as
Stevie -- Pups might have offered a prepubescent twist on a tired
formula. Cameron Van Hoy tries hard, but he can't make the volatile Stevie
believable. Be like the other kids, you're left thinking. Put down that gun and
just stick to video games. Screens at the Copley Place Saturday, September 11 at 7
and 9:45 p.m. and Sunday, September 12 at noon and 2:30 and 4:45 p.m.
Film Festival Feature Films
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The Minus Man |
The Tavern |
Black Eyed Dog |
The Last September |
A Wake in Providence |
Man of the Century |
Pups |
Dreaming of Joseph Leeds |
Wisdom of Crocodiles |
That's The Way I Like It |
American Beauty |
Mifune |
Black Cat, White Cat |
Hit and Runway |
All the LIttle Animals |
Me Myself I |
The Alchemist and the Virgin |
Trash |
Old Man River |
The Poet and the Con |
Snow Falling on Cedars |
Guinevere |
East is East |
American Movie |
Rivers of Babylon |
Two Ninas |
Rats |
Keepers of the Frame |
The Runner |
More Boston Film Festival information, film descriptions, and show times
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